[مقالة]
عنوان : |
U.S. Labor Women's Internationalism in the World War I Era |
نوع الوثيقة : |
نص مطبوع |
مؤلفين : |
Sue Cobble, Dorothy, مؤلف |
تاريخ النشر : |
2009 |
مقالة في الصفحة: |
P44-P58 |
اللغة : |
إنكليزي (eng) |
الكلمة المفتاح : |
Women's Trade Union League of America ,Congrè International des Travailleuses ,labor sisterhood , Mary Anderson Rose Schneiderman , Margaret%20Dreier Robins ,Organisation Internationale du Travail, internationalisme ouvrier indemnité de maternité , travail de nuit, normes internationales du travail , droits universels du travail |
خلاصة : |
In the aftermath of World War I, U.S. labor women sought to join with other working women around the world to formulate international labor rights and standards. At the urging of French and British labor women, the American Women's Trade Union League issued a call for an International Congress of Working Women to be held in Washington, D.C. in 1919. This essay analyzes the gender and labor policies proposed by the 1919 Congress and the organization it spawned, the International Federation of Working Women, the difficulties labor women encountered in forging a progressive internationalist politics, and the historical and scholarly significance of this experiment in international labor feminism. |
in Revue française d'étude américaines > 122 (Trimestrielle) . - P44-P58
[مقالة] U.S. Labor Women's Internationalism in the World War I Era [نص مطبوع ] / Sue Cobble, Dorothy, مؤلف . - 2009 . - P44-P58. اللغة : إنكليزي ( eng) in Revue française d'étude américaines > 122 (Trimestrielle) . - P44-P58
الكلمة المفتاح : |
Women's Trade Union League of America ,Congrè International des Travailleuses ,labor sisterhood , Mary Anderson Rose Schneiderman , Margaret%20Dreier Robins ,Organisation Internationale du Travail, internationalisme ouvrier indemnité de maternité , travail de nuit, normes internationales du travail , droits universels du travail |
خلاصة : |
In the aftermath of World War I, U.S. labor women sought to join with other working women around the world to formulate international labor rights and standards. At the urging of French and British labor women, the American Women's Trade Union League issued a call for an International Congress of Working Women to be held in Washington, D.C. in 1919. This essay analyzes the gender and labor policies proposed by the 1919 Congress and the organization it spawned, the International Federation of Working Women, the difficulties labor women encountered in forging a progressive internationalist politics, and the historical and scholarly significance of this experiment in international labor feminism. |
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